Prisoners' right to health in South Africa
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
People are not incarcerated voluntarily; they are placed in correctional centers by
the state either as un-sentenced suspects in a crime awaiting their cases to be
finalized or as sentenced offenders, sentenced by a court to incarceration. Because
the prisoners are placed in these centers involuntarily, the state has a total and
inescapable responsibility and duty to care for them in a manner that does not
violate or compromise their constitutional rights. The right to health care or right to
access to health care is one such right.
The International Bill of Rights, together with a number of charters and treaties have
set minimum standards that, when read together, articulate the right to health for
prisoners and lay down a platform on which comprehensive international legal
framework can be developed guaranteeing the right to health of all persons who are
incarcerated and deprived of their liberty. This framework has also laid a perfect
foundation from which the Constitution, particularly the Bill of Rights, of the Republic
of South Africa was based. The Bill of Rights, Chapter 2 in the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, contains several guarantees aimed at safeguarding the
rights of those individuals detained by the State, whether they are sentenced
prisoners or awaiting trial. The Correctional Services Act was promulgated in 2004 in
creating a rights based framework for South African?s prison system. The
Department of Correctional Services must provide, within its available resources,
adequate healthcare services, based on the principles of primary health care, in
order to allow every prisoner to lead a healthy life. Although the Department of
Correctional Services is governed by a discrete piece of legislation in the form of
Correctional Services Act, it does not have its own separate laws that govern health
care, but have to be in line with what the National Health Act and the Constitution
dictates. In terms of the Right to Healthcare and Medical Treatment, the Department
of Correctional Services complies with all Department of Health policies and
practices.
The Constitution, together with legislation (DCS, NHA and regulations) have
provisions that clearly entrench the protection of health related rights of prisoners. From the legal perspective, the Constitution and legislation have sufficient
safeguards that promote the right to health care for prisoners. The court has also
been equal to the task in enforcing these rights. It has to be noted, however, that
whilst litigation has brought victory to individual complainants, these victories have
often not translated into fundamental changes in reality situations on the ground. The
disjuncture between what is in the law and what actually happens on the ground
stems from challenges that can be solved internally by the Department of
Correctional Services and others that outside the purview of the department.
Description
Mini Dissertation (MPhil)--University of Pretoria, 2016.
Keywords
UCTD, Prisoners' right, Prisoners' right to health
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Mnguni, VA 2016, Prisoners' right to health in South Africa, MPhil Mini Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/60067>